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Navigating the Legislative Process:

Navigating the Legislative Process:. Insights from the Mather Policy Internship Jonathan Morris AIP Mentor: Jennifer Greenamoyer Congressman Andrews’ Intern Coordinator: Vince Sarubbi. The Mather Policy Internship.

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Navigating the Legislative Process:

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  1. Navigating the Legislative Process: Insights from the Mather Policy Internship Jonathan Morris AIP Mentor: Jennifer Greenamoyer Congressman Andrews’ Intern Coordinator: Vince Sarubbi

  2. The Mather Policy Internship Dr. John Mather pictured with the 2012 Mather Interns, Allen Scheie and myself, Jonathan Morris • Dr. John Mather received the 2006 Nobel Prize in Physics for his work with Dr. George Smoot on the Cosmic Background Explorer Satellite. • He used part of the prize’s monetary award to establish an undergraduate internship program with AIP modeled after the Congressional Fellowships program for recent Ph.D recipients. • “The aim of the program is to promote awareness of the policy process among young scientists by directly engaging them in the work that goes on in the federal government.” – AIP Executive Director Fred Dylla

  3. The Legislative Office of Congressman Robert E. Andrews • I spent the summer working with the Legislative Office of Congressman Robert E. Andrews. • Represents the First District of New Jersey: Camden, Haddon Heights, and the Eastern Suburbs of Philadelphia. House of Representatives Committee Assignments: Committee on Armed Services Subcommittee on Emerging Threats and Capabilities Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations Panel on Defense Acquisition Reform (Ranking Member) Committee on Education and the Workforce Subcommitee on Higher Education and Workforce, Subcommittee on Health, Employment, Labor, and Pensions (Ranking Member)

  4. The House Office Building Complex Courtesy of the Architect of the Capitol and the Capitol Visitor Center

  5. Congressional Office Structure

  6. Intern Duties • Greet Constituents and Visitors (aka Lobbyists) • Answer the Phones • Sort the Mail and Faxes (Pictured at Right) • Run Errands (FedEx, Franking) • Print/Copy/Fax • Process Tour Requests for the White House and the Capitol • Process Flag Requests • Draft Correspondence • Draft Statements for the Congressional Record • Conduct Legislative Research

  7. Tours • Constituents schedule tours of the Capitol and the White House through their Representatives’ Offices. • Some offices have interns give the tours, and some rely on Capitol Visitor Center Staff.

  8. Drafting Correspondence

  9. Congressional Record Statements

  10. Legislative Research Here is an example of a memo detailing the provisions of proposed legislation: the essence is to get the detail across on simplest terms. It was introduced in the House as H.R. 6120, by Congressman Michael Honda, and has ten cosponsors. None of them sit on the House Ways and Means Subcommittee on Select Revenue Measures.

  11. Walk and Talk Dr. John Holdren advising President Obama – a classic example of ‘Walk and Talk’ Photo Courtesy of the Office of Science and Technology Policy

  12. Contacting Your Representative • Interns are the first point of contact in the triage process. Their first indicator: Are you a constituent? • Constituent letters, emails, and faxes are logged by batch into a database. • Generally, offices will receive many of the same form letter. There is software that identifies similar language in these letters and groups it. Thousands of emails can be processed in a few clicks. • Calls reach the interns first and require a bit more thought and effort than batching form letter emails from the Congressional website. • Many callers express their wish for their Representative to support or vote for a specific piece of legislation. These are logged into a database.

  13. Getting Your Input to the Right Spot • If you can cite specific policy research, polling data, or other evidence to back up an argument your call is more effective. • Congressional Staff have a pretty good idea of what constituents desire. • If you have input that would benefit an LA, the intern will want to pass it along. • They might ask you to email the LA or if the LA is available, transfer you to them. • Tasked with triaging everything from insults directed towards the Member from outside the district to calls from the Member’s wife asking when they will be home, interns are valued by how appropriately they can discern valuable calls. • If you can’t sell them on it, your representative won’t be able to sell it to Congress or your district.

  14. Takeaway: Navigate the Process Correctly to Maximize Your Effectiveness • Your information is only valuable if it reaches the right person. • The intern at the front desk is tasked with triaging calls. • Remember, most are volunteering because they care about making the country a better place. • Make an ally with your first impression: it gets passed along each rung in the ladder by body language, tone of voice, etc when the intern pitches your input to a LA. • Don’t be slighted if an LA isn’t available – if you get their email and can send a policy report, research paper, or poll and provide an executive summary with the major points they can cite when they advise your Representative, you’re making them more effective at their job and they genuinely value the help.

  15. Look for an article in Physics Today!

  16. America is Self Governing • For better or for worse, the United States is self governing. • Present it correctly, and your ideas, support, and evidence will help. • America Needs You Photo Courtesy of Todd Cain Benson

  17. Acknowledgements • Dr. John Mather • AIP and SPS • Especially Jennifer Greenamoyer, Bo Hammer, and Kendra Redmond • Congressman Andrews • Legislative Correspondent Vincent Sarubbi

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